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A powerful U.S. Senate investigatory committee has launched a
bipartisan probe into an American nonprofit’s funding of efforts to oust
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after the Obama
administration’s State Department gave the nonprofit taxpayer-funded
grants, a source with knowledge of the panel's activities told FoxNews.com.

The fact that both Democratic and Republican sides of the Senate
Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations have signed off on the probe
could be seen as a rebuke to President Obama, who has had a
well-documented adversarial relationship with the Israeli leader.

The development comes as Netanyahu told Israel’s Channel Two
television station this week that there were “governments” that wanted
to help with the “Just Not Bibi” campaigning -- Bibi being the Israeli
leader’s nickname.

It also follows a FoxNews.com report
on claims the Obama administration has been meddling in the Israeli
election on behalf of groups hostile to Netanyahu. A spokesperson for
Sen. Rob Portman, Ohio Republican and chairman of the committee,
declined comment, and aides to ranking Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill,
of Missouri, did not immediately return calls.

The Senate subcommittee, which has subpoena power, is the Homeland
Security and Governmental Affairs’ chief investigative body with
jurisdiction over all branches of government operations and compliance
with laws.

But a source familiar with the matter confirmed for FoxNews.com that the probe -- undisclosed until now -- was both underway and bipartisan in nature.

According to the source, the probe is looking into “funding” by
OneVoice Movement – a Washington-based group that has received $350,000
in recent State Department grants, and until last November was headed by
a veteran diplomat from the Clinton administrations.

A subsidiary of OneVoice is the Israel-based Victory 15 campaign,
itself guided by top operatives of Obama’s White House runs, which seeks
to “replace the government” of Israel.

“It’s confirmed that there is a bipartisan Permanent Subcommittee
inquiry into OneVoice’s funding of V15,” the source said, speaking on
condition of anonymity about the American group, which bills itself as
working for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

In his television interview, Netanyahu said the coalition seeking to
oust him is generously funded by foreign donors who are also encouraging
a high voter turnout among Israel's Arab and left-wing voters in a bid
to replace the existing leadership.

He characterized the campaign against him as "unprecedented." While
Netanyahu pointed the finger at “European countries and left-wing people
abroad,” some observers note that he held back from openly criticizing
Obama during his recent trip to the U.S. to address Congress on problems
his government sees with administration-backed efforts to reach a
nuclear weapons inspection deal with Iran.

“We appreciate all that President Obama has done for Israel,”
Netanyahu told lawmakers -- while Obama refused to meet with the Israeli
leader, and later criticized his speech as “nothing new.”

No direct link has been confirmed between Obama and the
anti-Netanyahu campaign in Israel, but polls have shown that a large
majority of Israelis believe the administration has been interfering in
the election, set for March 17.

One expert told FoxNews.com earlier
this month the State Department grants constituted indirect
administration funding of the anti-Netanyahu campaign by providing
OneVoice with the $350,000 -- even though State Department officials
said the funding stopped in November, ahead of the announcement of the
Israeli election.

Gerald Steinberg, founder and president of NGO Monitor, which tracks
money flows to unmask non-governmental organizations that deviate from
their stated human rights or humanitarian agendas, said even ostensibly
unrelated grants keep an organization going during periods it is not
engaged in political activity.

Indeed, by January, OneVoice – whose focus on Israel’s 1967 borders
as a negotiating starting point reflects Obama’s thinking but is counter
to Netanyahu’s – had announced its partnership with V15.

Around the same time, Jeremy Bird, who served as Obama’s deputy
national campaign director in 2008, and his national campaign director
in 2012, arrived in Israel to help direct V15. Bird took with him
additional former Obama campaign operatives to help V15 achieve its goal
of knocking on one million doors to make the case for a change in
Israel’s leadership.

OneVoice is barred from directly targeting Netanyahu by U.S. law
regulating its tax-exempt status, and doing so would threaten that
status.

"OneVoice is eager to cooperate with any inquiry,” spokesman Payton
Knopf said Saturday. “And after a fair examination, we are confident no
wrong doing will be found.”

But the recent FoxNews.com investigation
showed that the nonprofit, in its 2014 Annual Report, said its Israel
branch would be “embarking on a groundbreaking campaign around the
Israeli elections.” In partnering with V15, the two groups have operated
from adjacent offices in Tel Aviv.

In addition to McCaskill, other Democrats on the subcommittee are
Sens. Jon Tester of Montana, Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, and Heidi
Heitkamp of North Dakota.

Republican subcommittee members, who form the majority, are Sens.
John McCain of Arizona, Rand Paul of Kentucky, James Lankford of
Oklahoma, Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire, and Ben Sasse of Nebraska, in
addition to Portman.

State Department documents say the grants to OneVoice were meant for
the group’s work in encouraging both Palestinian grass-roots civic
activism and Palestinian-Israeli peace talks. The State Department
itself, meanwhile, denied any of the funds had been used for election
campaign activities despite OneVoice’s backing of V15.

Launched in 2002 by snack bar mogul Daniel Lubetzky and boasting the
star power of such celebrities as Brad Pitt, Danny DeVito, Rhea Perlman
and Sir Paul McCartney among its honorary advisors, OneVoice was headed
until November by Marc Ginsberg, who advised President Carter on Middle
East policy and served as President Clinton’s ambassador to Morocco.

Ginsberg, who has described the administration’s approach to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict as a “window of opportunity,” is now
serving OneVoice as “special advisor” after resigning as CEO at a time
that turned out to be just ahead of the early December announcement of
the Israeli election.

“I resigned on November 11, 2014, because I had only committed to
serve as CEO for one year and my resignation was effective December 19,
2014,” he wrote in an email to FoxNews.com.
“I agreed to be available after that as a Senior Adviser on an
occasional basis to the organization…along with many others, but have
had ZERO decision-making authority over personnel, budgets, programs,
etc.

That responsibility was transferred to the Executive Director of
the OneVoice Europe organization after I resigned.”